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Hamas, Fatah
clash in deepening violence
Foreign Desk Report
GAZA CITY—Gunmen allied with Hamas and Fatah clashed at a West Bank
mosque and in Gaza Strip streets on Friday, as violence spread to areas
of the Palestinian territories normally untouched by factional strife.
Hamas accused a Fatah leader of orchestrating the previous day’s attack
on Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh — and a Hamas politician appeared to
call for the Fatah strongman’s assassination. Leaders of both groups
have warned that the violence threatens to degenerate into civil war.
The clashes in Gaza City and the West Bank town of Ramallah marred
celebrations Friday marking the 19th anniversary of Hamas’ founding.
However, the Islamic militant group pushed ahead with its rallies, and
about 70,000 loyalists gathered at a stadium in Gaza City, cheering
wildly, sobbing and firing in the air when Haniyeh arrived flanked by
more than 50 armed bodyguards.
“We joined this movement to become martyrs, not ministers,” Haniyeh
declared in a fiery speech, referring to Hamas loyalists’ willingness to
die for the Islamic cause. He then left for an emergency session of the
Hamas-led Cabinet, called to discuss the escalating unrest. The fighting
Friday in the normally peaceful city of Ramallah began when Hamas
supporters tried to march toward the town center, where Fatah-allied
police had deployed to prevent a planned Hamas celebration.
Police formed a cordon around a Hamas mosque to prevent those inside
from marching, then beat them with clubs and fired their rifles in the
air when the activists tried to leave. The marchers fought back,
throwing stones and bottles at the police, some of whom fired into the
crowd. Thirty-two people were wounded by stones and gunfire, hospital
officials said. In Gaza City, masked Hamas gunmen waged battle with
Fatah-allied police near a security post.
The showdown, a block from the home of Mohammed Dahlan, broke out
shortly after Hamas accused the Fatah strongman of orchestrating the
attack on Haniyeh on Thursday at the Gaza-Egypt border terminal. The
latest round of fighting erupted Monday with a drive-by shooting that
killed the three young sons of a Fatah security official and continued
Wednesday with the gangland-style execution of a Hamas judge. On
Thursday, Haniyeh rushed home from a trip abroad to try to quell the
violence.
But Israel ordered the Rafah crossing closed to keep Haniyeh from
bringing in an estimated $35 million he had collected abroad to help
alleviate the Palestinian financial crisis. Israeli officials said
Haniyeh could return to Gaza without the money, which it said was to be
used for terror attacks. Maria Telleria, spokeswoman for European
monitors at the crossing, said Haniyeh left the funds in Egypt. Israeli
Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh told Israel’s Army Radio that
government officials made the right decision not to let Haniyeh bring
the money into Gaza, adding that if Haniyeh had been killed, “I wouldn’t
put up a mourning tent.”
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